
Age: 54
male
Alan Ruscoe is a British actor who is best known for his work as various aliens, monsters and androids in the Star Wars films and the television series Doctor Who. On television, he has played Baraquel, Sariel and Araquiel in Sky One's Hex season 2, as well as a number of characters in the 2005 series of Doctor Who: Blon Fel-Fotch Passameer-Day Slitheen in "Aliens of London" and "World War Three" (and briefly in "Boom Town"), lead Auton in "Rose", the Anne Droid in "Bad Wolf" and "The Parting of the Ways", Trine-E in "Bad Wolf", and Lute of the Forest of Cheem in "The End of the World". Ruscoe has also appeared in the Doctor Whoaudio dramas The Veiled Leopard, The Settling, Gallifrey: Annihilation and Bernice Summerfield: Paradise Frost Big Finish Productions. He also played Andrew Stone, a Mars colonist later taken over by an alien lifeform in the November 2009 Doctor Who special "The Waters of Mars". In films, Ruscoe has played Daultay Dofine, Lott Dod and Plo Koon in Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace, and the Mangalore Kino in The Fifth Element. He also played "the Poulterer" in a 2004 television adaptation of A Christmas Carol. He appears alongside Terence Stamp, Vanessa Redgrave and Gemma Arterton in "Song For Marion" released this year. In theatre, he has played Deputy and Snake Preacher in Whistle Down the Wind, Riff Raff in The Rocky Horror Show in the English Theatre Frankfurt, Bob Cratchit in the 2004 touring version of Scrooge and Gussie Fink-Nottle in the 2007 UK tour of By Jeeves. In Germany, he played "Bob" the pizza-boy-eating alien for the T-Online television and poster campaign.

Alan Ruscoe

Plo Koon
for Plo Koon in Star Wars I - Guardians of Peace
Suggested by user_53973

Turmoil has gripped the Galactic Republic. A scientist from the peaceful planet of Alderaan has made a scientific breakthrough perfecting the art of cloning, but this perfect clone formula has generated a lot of controversy amongst the Republic. The formula could prove to be a huge advance for businesses looking for cheap labor, but the House of Organa, the sovereign leaders of Alderaan, are people of principle. They refuse to sell their formula to any outsider because they are afraid of people misusing it. The Banking Clan offers the royal family the highest price of all the buyers, but the Organas know that the Banking Clan will only use the formula for self-profit by treating the clones like slaves and not like real people, as the Organas know how they should be treated. The Banking Clan cannot be easily denied. Tensions are rising, lines are being drawn on the sand, and the Republic is on the brink of being torn apart…